O'Connell appointment shocks de Villiers

South Africa coach Peter de Villiers has revealed his surprise at the appointment of Paul O'Connell as captain of the British and Irish Lions squad.

However, the Springbok boss, who was anticipating a team led by Ireland skipper Brian O'Driscoll, believes that the tour party named by opposite number Ian McGeechan is "what we expected".

Lions manager Gerald Davies ended the waiting game in London this afternoon by announcing a 37-man party for the 10-match trip, that includes three Tests against world champions South Africa.

"I am surprised that Paul O'Connell got the captaincy ahead of Brian O' Driscoll, who was the most successful captain in the Six Nations in 2009 and captained the Lions to New Zealand four years ago," said De Villiers.

"Having said that, O'Connell is the captain of Munster and has also captained Ireland at Test level and we will not underestimate his leadership capabilities.

"This is a huge accolade for Paul O'Connell and it will come with great responsibility."

The captains of England, Scotland and Wales - respectively Steve Borthwick, Ryan Jones and Mike Blair - all failed to make the final list.

De Villiers continued: "Any selection will have its fair share of surprises but we believe that Ian McGeechan and his team have placed their confidence in what they believe to be the best 37 players in the four home unions.

"For us, however, it is more important that we now know exactly who our opposition will be as opposed to which players made it and which did not.

"It is a good squad, which is what we expected, based on the players who were on form in the Six Nations and understanding the type of players that Ian McGeechan was looking for.

"It is also evident that the squad has been picked on form, fitness, combinations and experience. It looks like a well-balanced and experienced group and it will be interesting to see how their Test side takes shape.

"As expected the bulk of players are from Ireland and Wales, but the number of England players in the group is evidence of the improvement they showed in the closing stages of the Six Nations."